Methods of using il-21 for adoptive immunotherapy and identification of tumor antigens

ABSTRACT

Methods for preparing ex vivo T cell cultures using IL-21 compositions for use in adoptive immunotherapy are described. Addition of IL-21 to cultures of non-terminally differentiated T cells population, either isolated or present in peripheral blood mononuclear cells are exposed to one or more tumor antigens, and in the presence of IL-21 compositions and antigen presenting cells (APCs), the resulting T cell population has an enhanced antigen-specificity, and can be reintroduced into the patient. Methods are also disclosed for identifying tumor antigens by culturing T cell populations exposed to IL-21 compositions and APCs in the presence of tumor material.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No.11/285,970, filed Nov. 23, 2005; which claims the benefit of U.S.Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/630,727, filed Nov. 24, 2004, bothof which are herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Cytokines generally stimulate proliferation or differentiation of cellsof the hematopoietic lineage or participate in the immune andinflammatory response mechanisms of the body. The interleukins are afamily of cytokines that mediate immunological responses. Central to animmune response is the T cell, which produces many cytokines and plays arole in adaptive immunity to antigens. Cytokines produced by the T cellhave been classified as type 1 and type 2 (Kelso, A. Immun. Cell Biol.76:300-317, 1998). Type 1 cytokines include IL-2, IFN-γ, LT-α, and areinvolved in inflammatory responses, viral immunity, intracellularparasite immunity and allograft rejection. Type 2 cytokines includeIL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-10 and IL-13, and are involved in humoralresponses, helminth immunity and allergic response. Shared cytokinesbetween Type 1 and 2 include IL-3, GM-CSF and TNF-α. There is someevidence to suggest that Type 1 and Type 2 producing T cell populationspreferentially migrate into different types of inflamed tissue.

IL-21 has been shown to be a potent modulator of cytotoxic T cells andNK cells. (Parrish-Novak, et al. Nature 408:57-63, 2000; Parrish-Novak,et al., J. Leuk. Bio. 72:856-863, 2002; Collins et al., Immunol Res.28:131-140, 2003; Brady, et al. J. Immunol 172:2048-58, 2004.) T cellresponses include enhancement of primary antigen response as modulationof memory T cell functions.

In murine studies, IL-21 potentiates the maturation and effectorfunction of NK cells and promotes T cell activation in response toalloantigen (Kasaian et al., Immunity 16:559-569, 2002). As a cytokinewhich limits NK cell expansion and promotes activation of murine CD8 Tcells, IL-21 is believed to play a role in the transition from innate toadaptive immunity (Kasaian, supra, 2002). Among CD4 T cells, IL-21 hasbeen described as both a Th1 (T helper 1) cytokine which upregulates theexpression of genes associated with innate immunity (Strengell et al.,J. Immunol. 170:5464, 2003) as well as a Th2 cytokine that inhibits thedifferentiation of naïve Th cells into IFN-gamma-producing Thl cells(Wurster et al., J. Exp. Med. 196:969, 2002). The effects of IL-21 inthe development of innate immunity and CD4 Th responses arewell-characterized (Strengell supra, 2003; Strengell et al., J. Leukoc.Biol. 76:416, 2004), but its role in the antigen-specific CD8+ T cellresponse, particularly in humans, had not been fully explored. Thepresent invention provides methods for inducing a high affinityantigen-specific cytotoxic T cell response by administering IL-21.Induction of a high affinity CD8 response against self antigens, whichare represented increasingly as potential immune targets in cancerimmunotherapy demonstrate a significant role for IL-21 inantigen-specific anti-tumor strategies. Thus, the present inventionprovides methods for administering IL-21 as an adjuvant in tumorvaccines and ex vivo expansion of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic Tcells for use in adoptive immunotherapy. The present invention alsoprovides methods for administering IL-21 as an adjuvant for vaccines andex vivo expansion of antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells in generalagainst viruses, and other target antigens. These and other uses shouldbe apparent to those skilled in the art from the teachings herein.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In one aspect, the present invention provides a method for identifying atumor antigen comprising co-culturing tumor material isolated from asubject with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the presenceof an IL-21 composition and antigen presenting cells (APCs), isolating aTcell population from the culture, enriching for individual T cells fromthe T cell populating, and characterizing the T cell clones for antigenspecificity. In certain embodiments, enrichment is cloning of individualT cells.

In another aspect of the present invention a method of identifying atumor antigen is provided which comprises co-culturing tumor materialfrom a subject with an isolated T cell population that is non-terminallydifferentiated in the presence of an IL-21 composition; cloningindividual T cells from the T cell population; and characterizing T cellclones for antigen-specificity. In one embodiment, the isolated T cellpopulation does not include CD4+ cells.

In certain embodiments of these methods, the PBMCs or T cell populationis an autologous cell population. In other embodiments, the tumormaterial comprises total RNA, lysed tumor cells, necrotic tumor cells,tumor proteins or apoptotic bodies. In another embodiment, co-culturingis in the presence of the IL-21 composition and one or more additionalcytokines.

In another aspect, the present invention provides method of preparing aT cell population for use in adoptive immunotherapy comprisingidentifying PBMCs having a histocompatible phenotype to a subject havinga tumor; co-culturing tumor material or tumor associated peptides fromthe patient with the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in thepresence of an IL-21 composition and APCs; expanding these cells inculture; and and reintroducing these cells back into the patient. In oneembodiment, the PBMCs are autologous. In one embodiment, the T cellpopulation is autologous. In another embodiment, the tumor materialcomprises total RNA, lysed tumor cells or apoptotic bodies. In anotherembodiment, the PBMCs or T cells are allogenic.

In another aspect, the present invention provides a method of preparinga T cell population for use in adoptive immunotherapy comprisingidentifying T cell population having a histocompatible phenotype to asubject having a tumor; co-culturing tumor material from the subjectwith the T cell population in the presence of an IL-21 composition andAPCs; expanding these cells in culture; and and reintroducing thesecells back into the subject. In one embodiment, T cell population isnaïve or non-terminally differentiated. In another embodiment, the Tcell population is autologous. In another embodiment, the tumor materialcomprises total RNA, lysed tumor cells or apoptotic bodies.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIGS. 1 and 2 illustrate that IL-21 enhances the generation of MART-1specific CTL. CD8+ T cells from healthy HLA-A2+ donors CG, NE and LDwere stimulated in vitro with autologous mature dendritic cells pulsedwith the MART-1, M26 peptide as described in the Examples.

FIG. 1. On day 7 after stimulation, 10⁶ Cells from each experiment groupwere harvested and stained with 20 μg/ml of peptide/MHC tetramer (PE,vertical axis) and a vital dye (PI or DAPI, horizontal axis). Data areexpressed as percentage of tetramer positive cells among gatedlymphocytes (purified CD8+ cells).

FIG. 2. The absolute number in millions of tetramer+ cells correspondingto untreated and IL-21 treated cultures from donors CG, NE and LDdepicted in A., and the fold increase in absolute numbers of IL-21treated to untreated cultures. C. Cultures from a normal healthy donor,CG, and a patient with metastatic melanoma, ST, were analyzed on Day 7after the first (Stim 1) and second (Stim 2) stimulation in the presenceor absence of IL-21 during Stim 1. IL-2 and IL-7 were added followingStim 2. Data are expressed as percentage of tetramer positive cellsamong gated lymphocytes (purified CD8+ cells). Results above arerepresentative of three separate experiments for each donor.

FIG. 3 illustrates that exposure to other gamma-chain cytokines, IL-2,IL-7 or IL-15 does not enhance generation of antigen-specific CTL. CD8+T cells from a healthy HLA-A2+ donor were stimulated in vitro withautologous mature dendritic cells pulsed with the MART-1, M26 peptide asdescribed the Examples. On day 7 after stimulation, 10⁶ Cells from eachexperiment group were harvested and stained with 20 μg/ml of peptide/MHCtetramer (PE, vertical axis) and a vital dye (PI or DAPI, horizontalaxis). Data are expressed as percentage of tetramer positive cells amonggated lymphocytes (purified CD8+ cells). Data are representative ofcultures from 3 HLA-A2+ donors.

FIG. 4 illustrates IL-21 treated cells undergo increased proliferationand decreased apoptosis during primary in vitro stimulation. Purifiedpopulations of naïve (CD45RA+, CD62L+) lymphocytes were pre-incubatedwith CFSE and stimulatied with MART-1 peptide in the absence (NoCytokine) or presence of IL-21 (IL-21-treated). On Day 7, cells werestained with MART-1 peptide-MHC Tetramer-PE and analyzed for thefraction of dividing cells (CFSE) or cells undergoing apoptosis (AnnexinV). CFSE-stained cells lose fluorescence intensity with successivedivisions. Results are expressed as percentage of non-dividing(rightmost box), dividing (center) and rapidly dividing (leftmost)tetramer+cells. For apoptotic cells, Annexin V staining tetramer+cellsare represented as a percentage in the right upper quadrant.

FIG. 5 illustrates IL-21 influences primarily naïve vs. memory CD8+ Tcells. Highly purified populations of naïve (CD45RA+, CD62L+) or memory(CD45RO+) T cells from a healthy normal donor (CG) and a donor withmelanoma (ST) were evaluated for induction of antigen-specific responsesto MART-1 peptide in the absence or presence of IL-21. The percentage ofMART-1-specific CTL are expressed as percentage tetramer+ cells amongtotal gated lymphocytes (CD8+ purified cells) after two cycles of invitro stimulation. Results are representative of experiments performedon 2 other normal healthy donors (NE, LD) and 2 other patient donors(AM, RE).

FIG. 6 illustrates IL-21 preferentially induces the generation of highavidity antigen specific CTL. Individual MART-1 specific CD8+ T cellclones were isolated from cultures stimulated in the absence (Control)or presence (IL-21) of IL-21. 8-12 representative CTL clones from eachexperimental condition were evaluated for target affinity in a chromiumrelease assay using T2 cells pulsed with decreasing concentrations ofM26 peptide (peptide dose titration analysis). Data are expressed as theconcentration (nM) required to reach 50% maximal lysis of target cells.On average, CTL clones generated by IL-21, demonstrated a decreasedpeptide dose requirement for specific lysis compared to CTL clonesgenerated in no cytokine control (* p<0.01). A: healthy donor, CG ();B: melanoma patient, ST (Δ). These same clones were evaluated forspecific reactivity to a MART-1+tumor cell line (526) at E/T ratio of 10to 1 in a standard 4 hr ⁵¹Chromium release assay (CRA). Significantlygreater lysis of antigen-positive tumor (ø , ▴) with background lysisof antigen-negative tumor (375 0, A) was observed in CTL clones isolatedfrom IL-21 treated culture than those isolated from no cytokine control.(† p<0.01). C: healthy donor, CG (, ◯) ; D: melanoma patient, ST (Δ,▴). Results are representative of 3 normal healthy donors and 3 patientdonors.

FIG. 7 illustrates IL-21 treated cultures enrich for CTL expressinghigher affinity TCR:tetramer dissociation assay. The tetramerdissociation assay, which depicts the fraction of bound tetramerremaining over time in the presence of an excess of unlabeled tetramer,was used as a surrogate measure of the TCR dissociation rate or TCRaffinity of individual clones. The fraction of PE-tetramer labelledMART-1-specific CTL clones from IL-21 treated cultures () was comparedwith clones from untreated cultures (◯) over time (2 to 60 minutes). Therate of decrease in the percent fluorescence intensity of tetramerstaining from Time 0 is inversely correlated with TCR affinity. Resultsare representative of 4 donors.

FIG. 8 illustrates IL-21 treated cultures yield a population ofCD28^(hi) antigen-specific CTL. Cells were collected frompre-stimulation PBMC, and then 7 days following stimulation with MART-1peptide-pulsed autologous dendritic cells in the absence or presence ofIL-21. Cells were stained for MART-1-Tetramer and simultaneously witheither CD45RA or CD45 RO, CD28 and CCR7 (FIG. 7). Histogram analysis forindividual phenotypic markers was performed on gated MART-1-tetramerstaining cells. CD28 expression on gated tetramer-staining cells is alsoshown for culture from Day 27 after stimulation.These results arerepresentative of cultures from 3 donors.

FIG. 9 illustrates IL-2 production following antigen-specificstimulation of CD28^(hi) and CD28-low expressing CTL. MART-1 tetramer+CD8+ T cells from IL-21 treated (CD28^(hi)) or untreated (CD28^(1ow))cultures were sorted and co-cultivated with either unpulsed T2 cells,MART-1 (M26) peptide pulsed T2 cells alone, or with CTLA4-Ig (0.5 μg/m1)to block B7-CD28 engagement. Supernants were collected 48 hr later andanalyzed for IL-2 by ELISA. Specific induction of IL-2 production amongCD28-hi expressing MART-1-specific CTL following antigen stimulation,and inhibited by CTLA4-Ig, is observed suggesting IL-2 induction amongIL-21 treated cells is CD28-dependent. Results are the mean oftriplicate assays, error bars as shown.

FIG. 10 illustrates IL-2 production following antigen-specificstimulation of CD28^(hi) and CD28^(low) expressing CTLs. MART-1tetramer-positive CD8 cells from IL-21 treated or untreated cultureswere sorted and co-cultivated with either unpulsed T2 cells, MART-1peptide-pulsed T2 cells alone, or with CTLA4-Ig to block B7-CD28engagement. Supernatatnts were collected 48 f later and analyzed forIL-2 by ELISA. Specific induction of IL-2 production among CD28^(hi)expressing MART-1 specific CTLs following antigen stimulation andinhibition by CTLA4-Ig is observed. Results are the mean of triplicateassays.

FIG. 11 illustrates that IL-21 influences the CD8 T cells response togp100 and NY-ESO-1 antigen. CD8 T cells were stimulated both in vitrowith autologous DCs pulsed with NY-ESO-1 or gp100 peptide. IL-21 wasadded to IL-21 treated cultures. Six days after primary in vitrostimulation cultures were analyzed for antigen specificity and surfacephenotype by tetramer staining and multiparametric analysis on flowcytometry. In panel A, NY-ESO-1 and G154-specific CTL frequency areshown as percentage of all CD8 T cells next to the boxed gates. The foldincrease in absolute numbers of of NY-ESO-1 specific CTLs was calculatedbased on numbers of cells in respective cultures and for NY-ESO-1 wasfound to be almost 20-fold greater among IL-21 treated cells. Panel B.Gated tetramer-positive cells from control or IL-21 treated cultureswere analyzed for CD8 expression. All cells were CD45RO+, CCR7−.Histogram analysis for CD28 expression among NY-OEST-1 orgp1000-specific CTLSs was found to be significantly upregulated amongIL-21 treated cultures compared to controls. There results arerepresentative of six separate experiments from threee HLA-2+individuals.

FIG. 12 illustrates that the addition of IL-21 to IL-6 and IL-12, IL-2,IL-7 or IL-15 alone significantly enhances the CD8 T cell response,compared to IL-6 and IL-12, IL-2, IL-7 or IL-15 alone.

FIG. 13 illustrates that IL-21 can increase T cell frequency to levelsthat are high enough for expansion and adoptive transfer without furtherantigen-specific T cell enrichment

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Prior to setting forth the invention in detail, it may be helpful to theunderstanding thereof to define the following terms:

The term “allelic variant” is used herein to denote any of two or morealternative forms of a gene occupying the same chromosomal locus.Allelic variation arises naturally through mutation, and may result inphenotypic polymorphism within populations. Gene mutations can be silent(no change in the encoded polypeptide) or may encode polypeptides havingaltered amino acid sequence. The term allelic variant is also usedherein to denote a protein encoded by an allelic variant of a gene.

The terms “amino-terminal” and “carboxyl-terminal” are used herein todenote positions within polypeptides. Where the context allows, theseterms are used with reference to a particular sequence or portion of apolypeptide to denote proximity or relative position. For example, acertain sequence positioned carboxyl-terminal to a reference sequencewithin a polypeptide is located proximal to the carboxyl terminus of thereference sequence, but is not necessarily at the carboxyl terminus ofthe complete polypeptide.

The term “cancer” or “cancer cell” is used herein to denote a tissue orcell found in a neoplasm which possesses characteristics whichdifferentiate it from normal tissue or tissue cells. Among suchcharacteristics include but are not limited to: degree of anaplasia,irregularity in shape, indistinctness of cell outline, nuclear size,changes in structure of nucleus or cytoplasm, other phenotypic changes,presence of cellular proteins indicative of a cancerous or pre-cancerousstate, increased number of mitoses, and ability to metastasize. Wordspertaining to “cancer” include carcinoma, sarcoma, tumor, epithelioma,leukemia, lymphoma, polyp, and scirrus, transformation, neoplasm, andthe like.

The term “co-administration” is used herein to denote that an IL-21polypeptide or protein and a second therapeutic molecule may be givenconcurrently or at a different times. The co-adminstration may be asingle co-administration of both IL-21 and the second therapeuticmolecule or multiple cycles of co-administration. Co-administration neednot be the only times either IL-21 or the second therapeutic molecule isadministered to a patient.

The term “combination therapy” is used herein to denote that a subjectis administered at least one therapeutically effective dose of IL-21 anda second therapeutic molecule. The IL-21 may be a mature polypeptide,fragment thereof, fusion or conjugate that demonstrates IL-21 biologicalactivity.

The term “enhance” when in reference to an immune response is usedherein to mean increasing the scale and/or efficiency of an immuneresponse or extending the duration of the immune response. The term isused interchangeably with “augument.” An immune response includes, butis not limited to, enhanced cytolytic activity, apoptotic activity orincreases in CD8+ T cell numbers or survival.

The term “isolated”, when applied to a polynucleotide, denotes that thepolynucleotide has been removed from its natural genetic milieu and isthus free of other extraneous or unwanted coding sequences, and is in aform suitable for use within genetically engineered protein productionsystems. Such isolated molecules are those that are separated from theirnatural environment and include cDNA and genomic clones. Isolated DNAmolecules of the present invention are free of other genes with whichthey are ordinarily associated, but may include naturally occurring 5′and 3′ untranslated regions such as promoters and terminators. Theidentification of associated regions will be evident to one of ordinaryskill in the art (see for example, Dynan and Tijan, Nature 316:774-78,1985).

An “isolated” polypeptide or protein is a polypeptide or protein that isfound in a condition other than its native environment, such as apartfrom blood and animal tissue. In a preferred form, the isolatedpolypeptide is substantially free of other polypeptides, particularlyother polypeptides of animal origin. It is preferred to provide thepolypeptides in a highly purified form, i.e. greater than 95% pure, morepreferably greater than 99% pure. When used in this context, the term“isolated” does not exclude the presence of the same polypeptide inalternative physical forms, such as dimers or alternatively glycosylatedor derivatized forms.

The term “level” when referring to immune cells, such as NK cells, Tcells, in particular cytotoxic T cells, B cells and the like, refers tothe number of cells or the activity of cells. An increased level iseither increased number of cells or enhanced activity of cell function.

The term “level” when referring to viral infections refers to a changein the level of viral infection and includes, but is not limited to, achange in the level of CTLs or NK cells (as described above), a decreasein viral load, an increase antiviral antibody titer, decrease inserological levels of alanine aminotransferase, or improvement asdetermined by histological examination of a target tissue or organ.Determination of whether these changes in level are significantdifferences or changes is well within the skill of one in the art.

The term “neoplastic”, when referring to cells, indicates cellsundergoing new and abnormal proliferation, particularly in a tissuewhere in the proliferation is uncontrolled and progressive, resulting ina neoplasm. The neoplastic cells can be either malignant, i.e. invasiveand metastatic, or benign.

A “polynucleotide” is a single- or double-stranded polymer ofdeoxyribonucleotide or ribonucleotide bases read from the 5′ to the 3′end. Polynucleotides include RNA and DNA, and may be isolated fromnatural sources, synthesized in vitro, or prepared from a combination ofnatural and synthetic molecules. Sizes of polynucleotides are expressedas base pairs (abbreviated “bp”), nucleotides (“nt”), or kilobases(“kb”). Where the context allows, the latter two terms may describepolynucleotides that are single-stranded or double-stranded. When theterm is applied to double-stranded molecules it is used to denoteoverall length and will be understood to be equivalent to the term “basepairs”. It will be recognized by those skilled in the art that the twostrands of a double-stranded polynucleotide may differ slightly inlength and that the ends thereof may be staggered as a result ofenzymatic cleavage; thus all nucleotides within a double-strandedpolynucleotide molecule may not be paired.

A “polypeptide” is a polymer of amino acid residues joined by peptidebonds, whether produced naturally or synthetically. Polypeptides of lessthan about 10 amino acid residues are commonly referred to as“peptides”.

A “protein” is a macromolecule comprising one or more polypeptidechains. A protein may also comprise non-peptidic components, such ascarbohydrate groups. Carbohydrates and other non-peptidic substituentsmay be added to a protein by the cell in which the protein is produced,and will vary with the type of cell. Proteins are defined herein interms of their amino acid backbone structures; substituents such ascarbohydrate groups are generally not specified, but may be presentnonetheless.

The term “receptor” denotes a cell-associated protein that binds to abioactive molecule (i.e., a ligand) and mediates the effect of theligand on the cell. Membrane-bound receptors are characterized by amulti-peptide structure comprising an extracellular ligand-bindingdomain and an intracellular effector domain that is typically involvedin signal transduction. Binding of ligand to receptor results in aconformational change in the receptor that causes an interaction betweenthe effector domain and other molecule(s) in the cell. This interactionin turn leads to an alteration in the metabolism of the cell. Metabolicevents that are linked to receptor-ligand interactions include genetranscription, phosphorylation, dephosphorylation, increases in cyclicAMP production, mobilization of cellular calcium, mobilization ofmembrane lipids, cell adhesion, hydrolysis of inositol lipids andhydrolysis of phospholipids. In general, receptors can be membranebound, cytosolic or nuclear; monomeric (e.g., thyroid stimulatinghormone receptor, beta-adrenergic receptor) or multimeric (e.g., PDGFreceptor, growth hormone receptor, IL-3 receptor, GM-CSF receptor, G-CSFreceptor, erythropoietin receptor and IL-6 receptor).

Molecular weights and lengths of polymers determined by impreciseanalytical methods (e.g., gel electrophoresis) will be understood to beapproximate values. When such a value is expressed as “about” X or“approximately” X, the stated value of X will be understood to beaccurate to ±10%.

All references used are herein incorporated by reference.

The present inventions are directed to use of IL-21 to increaseproliferation and survival of antigen-specific T cells. IL-21enhancement of antigen-specific T cells will be useful for increasingthe frequency of antigen-specific T cells, enriching for populations ofantigen-specific T cells with enhanced affinity, and generating apopulation of antigen-specific T cells with increased CD28 expressionand “helper-independent” phenotype (Widmer et al., Nature 294:750, 1981;Topp et al., J. Exp Med 198(6):947, 2003; Cheng et al., J Immunol169:4990, 2002)

In certain aspects the present invention provides methods that compriseculturing naïve T cells in the presence of an IL-21 composition and anantigen resulting in a cytotoxic T cell population that has a higheraffinity for an antigen than T cells cultured in the absence of IL-21.Of particular interest are tumor antigens. High affinityantigen-specific T cells have the capacity to recognize and kill tumor,whereas a low affinity T cell may have tumor antigen-specificity, yetstill not recognize and kill a tumor cell. Affinity of a T cell for atumor is in part dependent on the antigen density that is presented bythe tumor cell. If antigen presentation on the tumor cell is low, thenis more likely that only high affinity T cells will be able recognizethe tumor cell and initiate cytolysis. Moreover, the methods of thepresent invention can be used to increase T cell frequency to levelsthat are high enough for expansion and adoptive cell transfer withoutfurther antigen-specific T cell enrichment and thereby greatly decreasethe time to therapy and obviate the requirement for further selection orcloning.

In another aspect of the present invention, the methods of the presentinvention comprise generating an antigen-specific CTL population thathas a high affinity for self antigens by culturing T cells that havenon-terminally differentiated to an IL-21 composition. In oneembodiment, the T cells are isolated naïve T cells. Once theantigen-specific T cell population has been expanded ex vivo, the cellsare reintroduced into the patient. In certain embodiments, IL-21administration to the patient will continue and may be in combinationwith other therapies.

In another aspect, the methods of the present invention provide methodsfor enhancing the repetoire of antigens recognized by a T cellpopulation. The methods comprise co-culturing tumor material such as atumor cell line or derivative thereof (e.g. total RNA, lysed tumorcells, apoptotic bodies) with autologous T cells isolated from asubject. The tumor material and the T cells are cultured in the presenceof an IL-21 composition, and after allowing T cells to proliferate, theT cells are cloned. Antigen-specific T cells are identified and furtheranalyzed to characterize the antigen-specificity.

A. Description of IL-21.

Human IL-21 (SEQ ID NO:1 and SEQ ID NO:2) was originally designatedzalpha11 Ligand, and is described in commonly-owned U.S. Pat. Nos.6,307,024, and 6,686,178, which are incorporated herein by reference.The IL-21 receptor is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,057,128. The IL-21receptor, previously designated zalphal 1 (SEQ ID NO:5 and SEQ ID NO:6),and heterodimeric receptor IL-21R/IL-2Ry are also described incommonly-owned U.S Pat. Nos. 6,576,744, 6,803,451, 6,692,924 and WO00/17235, which are incorporated herein by reference. As described inthese publications, IL-21 was isolated from a cDNA library generatedfrom activated human peripheral blood cells (hPBCs), which were selectedfor CD3. CD3 is a cell surface marker unique to cells of lymphoidorigin, particularly T cells.

The amino acid sequence for the IL-21R indicated that the encodedreceptor belonged to the Class I cytokine receptor subfamily thatincludes, but is not limited to, the receptors for IL-2, IL-4, IL-7,IL-15, EPO, TPO, GM-CSF and G-CSF (for a review see, Cosman, “TheHematopoietin Receptor Superfamily” in Cytokine 5(2): 95-106, 1993). TheIL-21 receptor has been identified on NK cells, T cells and B cellindicating −21 acts on hematopoietic lineage cells, in particularlymphoid progenitor cells and lymphoid cells. Other knownfour-helical-bundle cytokines that act on lymphoid cells include IL-2,IL-4, IL-7, and IL-15. For a review of four-helical-bundle cytokines,see, Nicola et al., Advances in Protein Chemistry 52:1-65, 1999 andKelso, A., Immunol Cell Biol. 76:300-317, 1998.

For IL-21, a secretory signal sequence is comprised of amino acidresidues 1 (Met) to 29 (Ser), and a mature polypeptide is comprised ofamino acid residues 30 (Gln) to 162 (Ser) (as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2).The corresponding polynucleotide sequence is shown in SEQ ID NO:1. Thoseskilled in the art will recognize that the sequence disclosed in SEQ IDNO:1 represents a single allele of human IL-21 and that allelicvariation and alternative splicing are expected to occur.

B. Use of IL-21 Vaccine Therapy, Adoptive Immunotherapy andIdentification of Tumor Specific Antigens.

The present invention is based in part on a study of both human healthydonors and melanoma patients where a positive regulatory role for IL-21in the induction of a primary antigen-specific human CD8+ T cellresponse was demonstrated. Using peptide-MHC tetramers to track a rarebut measurable naïve T cell population recognizing a normal selfantigen, in the presence of IL-21, the frequency and absolute numbers ofantigen-specific CD8 T cells that could be elicited increased by morethan 20-fold compared to cultures grown in the absence of IL-21. Theenhanced generation of an antigen-specific T cell response is specificto this gamma-chain receptor cytokine since the addition of IL-2, IL-7or IL-15 during initial priming had no added effect over cultures thatreceived no cytokine. IL-21-exposed and antigen-primed T cells retainedthe capacity to respond to growth-promoting cytokines, such as IL-2 andIL-7, and could be readily isolated and expanded. The present inventionprovides IL-21 enhanced generation of human antigen-specific CD8+ Tcells characterized by CD28 upregulation and expression of high affinityTCR resulting in antigen-driven helper-independent IL-2 production,increased target avidity, and augmented antigen-specific tumor killing.The present invention provides methods of using IL-21 for induction of ahuman antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses and immunotherapy,particularly adoptive cell therapy.

In the studies described herein, the IL-21 augmented antigen-specificresponse was limited to the naïve and not memory T cell population usingpre-selected responder T cells. Naïve T cells have not previously seenantigen and have the potential to recognize and bind a single, uniqueantigen. A tumor antigen is a peptide or polypeptide or peptide complexthat has a different expression profile from antigen found on anon-tumor cells. For example, a non-tumor antigen may be expressed inhigher frequency or density by tumor cells than by non-tumor cells. Atumor antigen may differ from a non-tumor antigen structurally, forexample, the antigen could be expressed as a truncated polypeptide, havesome mutation in the amino acid sequence or polynucleotide sequenceencoding the antigen, be misfolded, or improperly modifiedpost-translationally. Similarity to antigens that are present on normal,non-tumor cells in the host organism allow the tumor cells to escape thehost's immunological surveillance mechanisms.

Observation that tumor-associated antigens generated specificimmunological responses which attacked tumors provided researchers abasis to develop tumor specific antigen cancer therapies. However,tumors express a multitude of antigens, many of which have not beenisolated or characterized. Moreover, not all tumor antigens areexpressed at levels high enough to stimulate a sufficient immuneresponse.

In recent years, many genes encoding tumor antigens that can berecognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes have been identified from cDNA ofhuman tumor cells (Gomi et al., J. Immunol. 163:4994-5004, 1999.)Examples include the genes HER/neu (Peoples et al., Proc. Natl Acad.Sci. USA, 92:432-436, 1995) and mutant CASP-8 (Mandruzzato et al., J.Exp. Med., 186:785-793, 1997). Tumor antigen-specific T cells can beisolated from patients, however maintaining these T cell cultures hasbeen difficult. Tumor antigen-specific T cells can be localized inblood, lymphoid tissue such as the spleen, or can be from the tumoritself. Generally, tumor tissue is biopsied and a cell suspension iscultured in vitro. It has been shown that antigen-specific tumor cellsin the presence of cytokine, such as IL-2, IL-7, IL-4, and IL-15 survivelonger (Vella et al., PNAS 95:3810-3815, 1998). In the instantinvention, addition of IL-21 to cultures of tumor antigen-specific Tcells in the presence of primary antigen presentation by dendritic cellsresulted in a significant increase in the absolute numbers ofantigen-specific T cells beyond that seen with IL-15, IL-6, IL-12, 2 orIL-7 alone. Thus, the present invention provides methods for identifyingnew tumor specific antigens and enhancing tumor antigen-specific T cellpopulations to target those tumors by exposing T cells to IL-21. Themethods for enhancing the repetoire of antigens recognized by a T cellpopulation by generating tumor-specific cell lines arose from havingdemonstrated that IL-21 compositions enhance proliferation ofantigen-specific T cell populations when antigen is presented tonon-terminally differentiated T cells. The methods comprise co-culturingtumor material such as a tumor cell line or derivative thereof (e.g.total RNA, lysed tumor cells, apoptotic bodies) with autologous T cellsisolated from a subject. The tumor material and the T cells are culturedin the presence of an IL-21 composition, and after allowing T cells toproliferate, the T cells are enriched, for example the T cells can becloned. In some embodiments, the need for IL-2 or other growth factorsis minimized by administration of IL-21. In other embodiments, it is notnecessary to have CD4+ T cells present in the culture. Antigen-specificT cells are identified are further analyzed to characterize theantigen-specificity. (See, van der Bruggen Science 254:1643, 1991 andEngelhard et al., Mol. Immunol 39:127, 2002).

It is known that a larger number of MART-1 specific T cells reside amongthe naïve population (Pittet et al, J. Exp. Med. 190:705, 1999) however,measurable frequencies of MART-1-specific T cells can also be detectedamong the memory population (D'Souza et al., Int. J. Cancer 78:699,2004), and yet these failed to expand when IL-21 was added. In the caseof patients with melanoma, prior encounter with antigen-bearing tumorcells may lead to defective signalling among memory T cells renderingthem unresponsive to IL-21 mediated proliferation in vitro (Zippelius,et al, Cancer Res. 64:2865, 2004; Lee et al., Nature Medicine 5:677,1999).

Antigen-primed T cells undergo increased proliferation and decreasedapoptosis when exposed to IL-21 compared to their untreatedcounterparts, hence providing methods for enhancing T cell-mediatedvaccines and providing an adjuvant for immunotherapeutic cancertreatments. IL-21 treatment led to upregulated CD28 expression andenriched for a population of T cells expressing a stable uniquephenotype, CD45RO+, CD28hi , CCR7- CD8+. This phenotype may becharacterized as intermediate between a naïve (CD45RO−, CD28+, CCR7+)and memory (CD45RO+, CD28−, CCR7−/+) T cell (Tomiyama, et al., J. Exp.Med. 198:947, 2003). CD28+CD8+ T cells represent potentially moreeffective CTL for adoptive immunotherapy since they can provide anantigen-driven autocrine signal for proliferation. Suchhelper-independent CD8 T cells would not require exogenous help in theform of IL-2 or CD4+ T cells to survive and expand (Ho et al., CancerCell 3:431. 2003; and Topp et al., J. Exp. Med. 198:947, 2003). Thus,the present invention provides methods for treating an immune-mediateddisease by providing a subject with a CD8+ T cell population that hasenhanced cytotoxic activity in the absence or reduced presence ofadditional cytokines, such as IL-2, or CD4+ T cells. The methods areparticularly useful for ex vivo expansion of cytolytic, antigen-specificCD8+ T cells, but may also be used in vivo when additional cytokinesresult in unwanted side effects or CD4+ cell populations arecompromised.

The examples disclosed herein demonstrate that exposure to IL-21 duringprimary in vitro stimulation also led to the generation ofantigen-specific T cell clones of uniformly higher affinity and targetcell avidity. These clones were represented by diverse TCR Vbetassuggesting that this was not likely the result of an expanded populationof a few high affinity clones, but a more global effect on the T cellrepertoire. Previous studies have shown an increased probability ofisolating higher affinity T cell clones when cytokines such as IL-10,that downregulate the stimulatory capacity of APCs, are used in culture(Tsai et al., Critical Rev. Immunol 18:65, 1998). IL-21 (Brandt et al.,Blood 102:4090, 2003) has been shown to lead to maturational arrestamong murine DC resulting in reduced MHC expression and decreasedstimulatory capacity for T cell activation. However, in that case, IL-21was added to human DCs that had already undergone full maturation. Inpreliminary studies, the addition of IL-21 to mature DC did not affectsurface expression of MHC-Class I, HLA-DR, CD80, CD83 or CD86 comparedto untreated DC. While not intending to be bound by theory, the resultssuggest dampened expression of surface stimulatory molecules is notlikely an explanation for the enhanced generation of high affinity Tcells in vitro. Pre-incubation of mature human DC with IL-21 also had noeffect on the frequency or affinity of CD8+ tetramer+T cells that couldbe generated.

The use of IL-21 in augmenting an antigen-specific CD8 T cell responsehas been explored in mouse models and found to be highly effective ineradicating aggressive tumors (Ma et al., J. Immunol. 171:608, 2002;Kishida et al., Mol. Ther. 8:552, 2003; Moroz et al., J. Immunol173:900, 2003). The selective effect of IL-21 on naïve vs memory T cellssuggests a greater influence during priming, and in fact, murine studiesdemonstrate a strong priming effect characterized by a slow rejectionresponse and induction of prolonged antitumor memory. IL-21 promoteslongterm survival of previously activated antigen-specific CD8 T cellsin vivo as a result of reduced apoptosis through an indeterminatemechanism possibly involving STAT3 phsophorylation or induction of acentral memory phenotype (Brenne et al., Blood 99:3756, 2002). Some ofthese effects may be attributable to CD28 upregulation amongIL-21-treated CD8 T cells.

Methods of using T cell populations for adoptive cell therapy intreatment of human subjects are known to clinicians skilled in the art.T cell populations prepared according to the methods described hereinand known in the art can be used in such methods. For example, adoptivecell therapy using tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, with MART-1 antigenspecific T cells have been tested in the clinic (Powell et al., Blood105:241-250, 2005). Patients with renal cell carcinoma have beenvaccinated with irradiated autologous tumor cells. Harvested cells weresecondarily activated with anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody and IL-2, thenreadministered to the patients (Chang et al., J. Clinical Oncology21:884-890, 2003.)

The present invention provides methods for enhancing adoptiveimmunotherapy by providing a patient with a level of enhanced immunityby stimulating cells ex vivo, and then readministering them to thepatient. The cells are histocompatible with the subject, and may beallogenic or autologous. The method of preparing comprises isolatingperipheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from a patient, expandingthese cells in culture to very high numbers in a culture mediacomprising an IL-21 composition, and then to reintroducing these cellsback into patients. The growth of these effector cells, which include NKcells, LAK cells, and tumor-specific T-cells, may require additionalcytokines such as IL-2 (Dudley et al., J. Immunother. 24:363-73, 2001)or IL-15 (Marks-Konczalik et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 97:11445-502000; Waldmann T A. Nat Med., 9:269-77, 2003; Fehniger et al., CytokineGrowth Factor Rev., 13:169-83, 2002.) Following the transfer of cellsback into patients, methods are employed to maintain their viability bytreating patients with cytokines that could include IL-21 and IL-2 (Bearet al., Cancer Immunol Immunother. 50:269-74, 2001; and Schultze et al.,Br. J. Haematol. 113:455-60, 2001). In another embodiment, once PBMCsare isolated, the cells can be further isolated to provide a morehomogeneous culture of CD8+ cells, and these cells are cultured in thepresence of an IL-21 composition and then readministered to the patient.Because IL-21 can increase T cell frequency to levels that are highenough for expansion and adoptive transfer without furtherantigen-specific T cell enrichment, the present invention providesmethods that can greatly decrease the time to therapy and obviate therequirement for further selection and/or cloning.

The present invention provides a method of preparing a T cell populationfor use in adoptive immunotherapy comprising identifying PBMCs having ahistocompatible phenotype to a tumor patient; co-culturing tumormaterial from the patient with the peripheral blood mononuclear cells(PBMCs) in the presence of an IL-21 composition and antigen presentingcells (APCs), such as autologous dendritic cells, monocytes, B cells,EBV-transformed B cell lines, allogeneic EBV transformed B cell linesexpressing the shared restricting allele, artificial antigen presentingcells (Yee et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci. 99(25):16168, 2002; Oelke et al.,Nat Med. 9(5):619-24, 2003; Maus et al., Clin Immunol. 106(1):16-22,2003; Cai et al., Immunol Rev. 165:249-65, 1998); expanding these cellsin culture; and reintroducing these cells back into the patient. In oneembodiment, the PBMCs are autologous. In another embodiment, the tumormaterial comprises peptide, total RNA, lysed tumor cells or apoptoticbodies.

The present invention also provides a method of preparing a T cellpopulation for use in adoptive immunotherapy comprising identifying a Tcell population having a histocompatible phenotype to a tumor patient;co-culturing tumor material from the patient with the T cell populationin the presence of an IL-21 composition and APCs; expanding these cellsin culture; and and reintroducing these cells back into the patient. Inone embodiment, the T cell population is autologous (Dudley et al.,Science 290:850, 2002).

The present invention provides a method of preparing a T cell populationfor use in adoptive immunotherapy comprising T cells, bone marrow cellsor PBMCs (including NK cells) engineered (by viral transduction,transfection, electroporation or other methods of introducing geneticmaterial) to express a T cell receptor or a chimeric T cell receptorfused with signaling molecules, that recognize the target antigen;culturing in the presence of an IL-21 composition; expanding these cellsin culture; and and reintroducing these cells back into the patient.(Hughes et al., Hum Gene Ther 16(4):457, 2005; Roszkowski et al., CancerRes 65(4):1570, 2005; Cooper et al., Blood 101:1637, 2003; Alajez etal., Blood 105:4583, 2005). In one embodiment, the T cell population isautologous.

The present invention also provides methods for improving cancer vaccinetherapy. Many tumors express foreign antigens that can potentially serveas targets for destruction by the immune system (Boon, T., Adv. CancerRes. 58:177-211, 1992). Cancer vaccines generate a systemictumor-specific immune response in a subject that comprises both humoraland cellular components. The response is elicited from the subject's ownimmune system by administering a vaccine composition at a site distantfrom the tumor or at the site of a localized tumor. The antibodies orimmune cells bind the tumor antigen and lyse the tumor cells. However,there remains a need for increased proliferation of T cell populationscapable of produced enhanced immune responses in vivo.

Numerous methods for immunizing patients with cancer antigens have beenemployed, and a variety of techniques are being used to amplify thestrength of the immune response following antigen delivery (reviewed inRosenberg, S A. (Ed.), Principles and practice of the Biologic Therapyof Cancer., 3rd edition, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia,Pa., 2000). Methods in which IL-21 can be used in combination with atumor vaccine include, but are not limited to, the delivery ofautologous and allogeneic tumor cells that either express the IL-21 geneor in which IL-21 is delivered in the context of a adjuvant protein.Similarly, IL-21 can be delivered in combination with injection ofpurified tumor antigen protein, tumor antigen expressed from injectedDNA, or tumor antigen peptides that are presented to effector cellsusing dendritic cell-based therapies. Examples of these types oftherapies include the use of cytokines like IL-2 in the context ofvaccination with modified tumor cells (Antonia et al., J. Urol.167:1995-2000, 2002; and Schrayer et al., Clin. Exp. Metastasis19:43-53, 2002), DNA (Niethammer et al., Cancer Res. 61:6178-84, 2001),and dendritic cells (Shimizu et al., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci USA96:2268-73, 1999). IL-21 can be used as an anti-cancer vaccine adjuvant.

The determination of vaccine efficacy is difficult to evaluate. Theultimate demonstration of efficacy is the rate of tumor regression,duration of disease-free survival, or, at least, time-to progression(TTP), these end-points require following patient progress for years. Toprovide a more immediate means for evaluating efficacy there is anongoing search for so called “surrogate markers” that would permit earlymeasurements and be predictive of clinical outcome. As of today, invitro measurements of tumor- and/or vaccine-specific immune responseshave not proven successful as surrogate markers (see, Srivastava P., NatImmunol 1:363-366, 2000).

For any cancer therapy each protocol may define tumor responseaccessments differently, but exemplary guidelines can be found inClinical Research Associates Manual, Southwest Oncology Group, CRAB,Seattle, Wash., Oct. 6, 1998, updated August 1999. According to the CRAManual (see, chapter 7 “Response Accessment”), tumor response means areduction or elimination of all measurable lesions or metastases.Disease is generally considered measurable if it comprisesbidimensionally measurable lesions with clearly defined margins bymedical photograph or X-ray, computerized axial tomography (CT),magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or palpation. Evaluable disease meansthe disease comprises unidimensionally measurable lesions, masses withmargins not clearly defined, lesion with both diameters less than 0.5cm, lesions on scan with either diameter smaller than the distancebetween cuts, palpable lesions with diameter less than 2 cm, or bonedisease. Non-evaluable disease includes pleural effusions, ascites, anddisease documented by indirect evidence. Previously radiated lesionswhich have not progressed are also generally considered non-evaluable.

Positive therapeutic outcome can be measured using objective statusprotocols to assess solid tumor response. Representative criteriainclude the following: (1) Complete Response (CR) defined as completedisappearance of all measurable and evaluable disease with no newlesions, and no disease related symptoms. No evidence of non-evaluabledisease; (2) Partial Response (PR) defined as greater than or equal to30% decrease from baseline in the sum of products of perpendiculardiameters of all measurable lesions, with no progression of evaluabledisease, no new lesions. According the RESIST criteria, patients with atleast one measurable lesion; (3) Progression defined as 20% or anincrease of 10 cm² in the sum of products of measurable lesions over thesmallest sum observed using same techniques as baseline, or clearworsening of any evaluable disease, or reappearance of any lesion whichhad disappeared, or appearance of any new lesion, or failure to returnfor evaluation due to death or deteriorating condition (unless unrelatedto this cancer); (4) Stable or No Response defined as not qualifying forCR, PR, or Progression. (See, Clinical Research Associates Manual,supra.)

The invention is further illustrated by the following non-limitingexamples.

EXAMPLES Example 1 A. Cell Lines and Reagents

Melanoma cell lines A375 (CRL 1619; American Type Culture Collection(ATCC), Manassas, Va.), and Mel 526 (Arrighi et al., Cancer Res.60(16):4446-52, 2000; Marcinola et al. J Immunother Emphasis TumorImmunol. 19(3):192-205, 1996.) were maintained in RPMI with HEPES (25mM), L-glutamine (4 mM), penicillin (50 U/ml), streptomycin (50 mg/ml),sodium pyruvate (10 mM), non-essential amino acids (1 mM), and 10% fetalbovine serum (Hyclone, Utah). Both lines express the HLA-A2 allele, butonly Mel 526 expresses the MART-1 antigen. The T2 cell line is aTAP-deficient T-B-cell hybrid expressing the HLA-A2 allele. EBV-LCL celllines are Epstein-Ban virus transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines (Yee,FHCRC, Seattle, Wash.).

B. Induction of Human Antigen-Specific CD8+ T Cells

Melanoma M26˜35 peptide specific T cells were generated (Yee et al.,PNAS 99:16168, 2002; Yee et al., J. Immunol 162:2227, 1999; Tsai et al.,J. Immunol 158:1796, 1997). Donor blood was typed by the HLA Typing Labat the Puget Sound Blood Center (Seattle, Wash.). CD8+ T cells werefirst isolated by a CD8 positive isolation kit (Dynabeads, Dynal, Oslo,Norway) from leukapheresis PBMCs, suspended in CTL medium consisting ofRPMI 1640, 25 mM HEPES, 2 mM L-glutamine, penicillin (50 U/ml),streptomycin (50 mg/ml) (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.), and 10%human serum from normal donors, and then placed in 6 well tissue culturedishes (Costar, Corning Incorporated, Coring, N.Y.) at 6×10⁶ cell/well.Mature DCs were harvested and pulsed with 40 μg/ml of synthesisedpeptides at 2×10⁶ cell/ml in the presence of 3 μg/ml of β2 microglobulin(Scripps Lab, San Diego, Calif.) in PBS with 1% human serum albumin(Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.) for 4 hrs at room temperature.After washing three times with sterile PBS (Life Technologies), DCs weremixed with purified CD8 T cells at 3×10⁵ cells/well in 6 well plate.Cytokines, IL-15 (10 ng/ml, R&D Systems, Minneapolis, Minn.), IL-2 (10U/ml, Chiron, Emeryville, Calif.), IL-7 (10 ng/ml, R&D Systems), orIL-21 (30 ng/ml, ZymoGenetics, Seattle, Wash.) were added individuallyto each well immediately after the culture initiated. IL-2 (50 IU/ml)and IL-7 (10 ng/ml) were added one day after 2nd stimulation to furtherfacilitated expansion of activated antigen-specific T cells.

DC were generated (Bender et al., J. Immunol. Methods 196:121, 1996) byexposing adherent PBMC to IL-4 (500 U/ml, R&D) and GM-CSF (800 U/ml,Amgen, Thousand Oaks, Calif.) in AIM-V® medium (Life Technologies)followed by maturation using IL-1β at 2 ng/ml, IL-6 at 1000 U/ml, TNF-αat 10 ng/ml (R&D Systems) and PGE-2 at 1 μg/ml (Sigma-Aldrich, St.Louis, Mo.) for an additional 2 days. The mature DC population containedmore than 90% CD83+ DCs on day 8 as determined by FACS analysis.

C. Antibody Plus Peptide-MHC Tetramer Staining of T Cells

PE or APC labeled M26-MHC-Tetramer and G154-MHC-tetramers were producedin the immune monitoring lab at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center based onpreviously described protocols (Altman et al., Science 274:94, 1996).For sample analysis, 0.5×10⁶ cells in 25 μl of 2% FCS/PBS were firststained with peptide tetramer-PE or APC (final concentration of 20 μgMHC/ml) for one hour at room temperature, followed by anti-CD28-APC (BD,PharMingen, San Diego, Calif.) or anti-CD28-FITC (Caltac Lab,Burlingame, Calif.), anti-CCR7-PE and anti-CD45RO or anti-CD45RA-FITC(BD, PharMingen, San Diego, Calif.) staining for 20 min at 4° C. Afterwashing with PBS, cells were resuspended in PBS containing 2% FBS andDAPI was added. Data were acquired using a FACScalibur flow cytometerand CellQuest (BD) and analyzed using FlowJo software (Tree Star, SanCarlos, Calif.).

D. Enrichment for Naïve and Memory Subsets

T cells were purified from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells bythe sequential application of a combination of magnetic beads and anAutomacs magnetic sorter (Miltenyi Biotech, Auburn Calif.). CD8+ cellswere isolated using negative selection with the CD8 isolation kit II.Subsequent naïve (CD8+CD45RO−CD45RA+CD62L+) cell selection involveddepletion of memory CD8 cells using a CD45RO bead, followed by positiveselection of CD62L positive cells by staining with PE-conjugated CD62Lantibody (BD Phamingen, San Diego, Calif.) and incubation with an antiPEbead. Memory cell isolation (CD8+CD45RA−CD45RO+) involved depletion ofthe naïve population with a CD45RA+bead. Typical purities assessed byFACs were in excess of 95%.

E. Cloning and Expansion of Ag-Specific CTL

The cloning and expansion procedures as described Yee, supra, 2002;Riddell et al., J. Immunolog. Methods 128:189, 1990, were used toisolate T cells. Tetramer+ sorted T cells were plated at limitingdilution in 96-well round-bottomed plates (Nalge Nunc International,Denmark) in the presence of irradiated feeder cells (PBL and LCL) at aresponder to stimulator ratio of 1:50,000 together with anti-CD3 mAb(OKT3, Ortho Tech, Raritan, N.J.) and 50 U IL-2/ml in 0.2 ml of CTLmedium. Wells positive for clonal growth were identified 10-14 daysafter plating and screened in a microcytotoxicity assay.Peptide-specific clones were transferred to 25-cm2 flasks (Costar,Corning Incorporated, Coring, N.Y.), restimulated with anti-CD3 mAb, andirradiated allogeneic PBL and LCL were added as feeder cells for rapidexpansion. The cultures were fed with IL-2 at 50 U/ml 24 hrs afterrestimulation and then every 3 days. After 14 days, cells were used forfurther analyses or cryopreserved.

F. In Vitro Cytotoxicity Assay

Target cells (375, 526 melanoma cell lines or T2 cells) were labeledwith 100 μCi ⁵¹Cr and co-cultured with effector cells for 4 hrs at 37°C. plus 5% CO₂. For peptide dose titration studies, T2 were pulsed witha peptides at concentrations ranging from 10¹ to 10⁷ pg/ml for 1 hourand then washed prior to ⁵¹Cr labeling. Released ⁵¹Cr was measured witha gamma scintillation counter and percent specific lysis was determinedby using the formula: percent specific release=Experimentalrelease-Spontaneous release/Total release. Spontaneous release was <10%of the total release in all assays.

G. MHC/Peptide Dissociation Assay to Identify High and Low Affinity CTLClones

CTL clones were stained with APC-Tetramer (20 μg/ml) for 1 h at roomtemperature and washed once with cold PBS to eliminate unbound tetramer.Cells were incubated in the presence of an excess (100 μg/ml) ofPE-labeled tetramer to prevent rebinding of APC-Tetramer after theirdissociation from TCR. During this period, aliquots of cells werecollected at different time points and fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde forflow cytometry analysis. The rate of APC tetramer dissociation isinversely correlated with TCR affinity (Dutoit et al., J. Immunol168:1167, 2002).

Example 2 IL-21 Augments the Frequency of Antigen-Specific CD8+ T CellsGenerated Following Primary In Vitro Stimulation

A model system for primary in vitro stimulation of antigen-specific Tcells was established by isolating CD8+ T cells from PBMC of HLA A2+healthy donors and co-culturing with autologous mature dendritic cellspulsed with immunogenic epitopes of the tumor-associated self antigen,MART-1 (M26-35 peptide). Cultures were grown with no added cytokine orwith IL-21 (FIG. 1). The frequency of MART-1-specific CD8 T cellresponses in cultures was evaluated 7 days after stimulation by tetramerstaining In representative healthy donors (CG, NE and LD), a 16 to20-fold increase in MART-1 specific CD8+ T cell frequency was observedin IL-21 exposed cultures compared with no cytokine control cultures(0.12 vs 2.26% ; 0.12 vs 1.95 and 0.11 vs 2.2% respectively) followingone cycle of in vitro stimulation (FIG. 1). The absolute numbers ofantigen-specific T cells generated in IL-21-treated cultures exceededcontrol cultures by more than 20 to 30-fold (Table 1).

TABLE 1 CG NE LD Control 0.22 × 10⁶ 0.30 × 10⁶ 0.43 × 10⁶ IL-21 7.80 ×10⁶ 8.15 × 10⁶ 14.1 × 10⁶ Fold increase 35 27 33

The use of other cytokines belonging to the common gamma-chain cytokinereceptor family, IL-2, IL-7 and IL-15 during primary in vitrostimulation produced no added effect on the frequency of MART-1-specificCD8+ T cells compared to no cytokine control cultures (FIG. 3).

The addition of IL-2 and IL-7, however, does promote the ex vivoexpansion of previously primed, antigen-experienced T cells asdemonstrated by our group and others (Gervois, et al., Clin Cancer Res6:1459-1467, 2000; Liao et al., Mol Ther 9:757-764, 2004). When added tocultures following a second in vitro stimulation, IL-2 (10 U/ml) andIL-7 (10 ng/ml) produced a further increase in the magnitude of theMART-1 specific CD8 T cell population among IL-21 treated (11.8%) overuntreated cultures (2.43%) (FIG. 2, donor CG).

These studies demonstrate that IL-21 has the capacity to augmenttumor-associated antigen-specific CTL responses in patients withmelanoma, a tumor which shares expression of MART-1. In a representativepatient, the frequency of MART-1-specific CTL generated in IL-21 treatedcompared with untreated cultures after two cycles of in vitrostimulation demonstrate a 40-fold increase when IL-21 was added comparedto untreated controls (19.1 vs 0.46%) (FIG. 2, patient ST).

To evaluate if the increase in frequency and absolute numbers ofantigen-specific CD8 T cells generated among IL-21 treated cultures wasdue to enhanced proliferation and/or enhanced survival, naïve CD8 Tcells were labelled with CFSE, stimulated in vitro with MART-1 peptidepulsed autologous DC and at Day 7, evaluated for fraction of dividingcells (as determined by quantum decreases in CFSE staining accompanyingeach cell division) and apoptosis (Annexin V staining) For CFSEstaining, analyses performed on the tetramer-positive (MART-1-specific)T cell population demonstrate a substantially greater fraction ofnon-dividing cells (rightmost compartment) among untreated cultures(44%) than IL-21 treated cultures (18%) (FIG. 4). In fact, the ratio ofrapidly dividing (leftmost compartment) to nondividing antigen-specificT cells is more than 3 fold greater among the IL-21 treated compared tothe untreated cultures (63:18% vs. 36: 44%). That the effect of IL-21 onT cell proliferation is antigen-specific is demonstrated by the largefraction of tetramer-negative (non-antigen-specific) T cells remainingin the non-dividing phase (95.6 and 87.9%).

Annexin V staining of tetramer-positive T cells on Day 7 reveals amodest decrease in the fraction of apoptotic (Annexin V+)antigen-specific T cells among IL-21 treated cultures compared tountreated cultures (10.4 vs 5.4% of tetramer+T cells, respectively, FIG.2). Taken together, these results suggest that the increase in frequencyand absolute numbers of antigen-specific CD8 T cells generated amongIL-21 treated cultures was due predominantly to enhancedantigen-specific cellular proliferation and in minor part to increasedsurvival or decreased apoptosis.

Example 3 IL-21 Enhances Antigen-Specific T Cell Response Among aPredominantly Naïve CTL Population

The capacity of IL-21 to enhance the generation of antigen-specific CD8+T cells was evaluated separately among naïve and memory T cells.Purified populations of naïve (>98% CD45RA+, CD62L+) CD8+ T cells werecompared with memory (100% CD45R0+) CD8+ T cells from both a healthynormal donor (CG) (FIG. 5) and an individual with metastastic melanoma(ST). Whereas IL-21 exerts minimal effect on the frequency of MART-1specific cells generated from memory CD8+T cells (0.10 to 0.15% and 0.05to 0.037%), a 12 to 90-fold increase is observed among naïve CD8 T cellsfollowing IL-21 exposure (0.94 to 12.5% and 0.08 to 7.08%) providingevidence that IL-21 influences primarily naïve T cells.

Example 4 CTL Generated From IL-21-Treated Cultures Represent aPopulation of High Affinity Antigen-Specific T Cells with Enhanced TumorReactivity

To further characterize the function of antigen-specific T cellpopulations generated under the influence of IL-21 at the clonal level,tetramer+CD8+ T cells from both a healthy donor (CG) and melanomapatient (ST) were sorted on day 7 and cloned at limiting dilution into96-well plates. MART-1 specific clones identified by microcytotoxicityassays were expanded and tested for 1) the peptide concentrationrequired for 50% maximal lysis (P₅₀) of peptide pulsed T2 cells and 2),the ability to lyse antigen-positive melanoma targets. For evaluatingP₅₀, the HLA-A2-transfected EBV B cell line, T2, was titrated withpeptide concentrations ranging from 10⁷ to 10² pM. Results are presentedas the peptide dose requirement (nM) for 50% lysis (P₅₀). CTL clonesgenerated from IL-21 treated cultures required a >one log lower peptidedose requirement than their untreated counterparts−mean 3 nM (range0.6-30 nM) vs. mean 80 nM (range 16-500 nM), respectively (FIG. 6A). Asimilar effect of IL-21 was seen for CTL clones generated from melanomapatient (ST) (FIG. 6B).

At an effector to target (E:T) ratio of 10:1, T cell clones isolatedfollowing stimulation in the presence of IL-21 displayed much higherspecific lytic activity against the MART-1 positive 526 melanoma cellline (35˜45%) than those isolated in the absence of IL-21 (FIGS. 6C and6D). For each individual clone, increased tumor reactivity wascoincident with decreased peptide dose requirement suggesting that CTLgenerated in the presence of IL-21 exhibited a higher avidityinteraction with its cognate target.

That the increased tumor avidity is attributable to a higher affinityTCR and not other accessory factors can be demonstrated usingtetramer-based TCR staining assays. Although the intensity of tetramerstaining can generally be correlated with TCR affinity (Yee et al., J.Immunol 162:2227, 1999; Crawford et al., Immunity 8:675, 1998), a moreprecise definition of TCR affinity can be obtained based on the rate oftetramer dissociation, Kd, from its specific TCR ligand (Dutoit et al.,J. Immunol 168:675, 1990). In this assay, the Kd of the TCR-peptide-MHCinteraction or TCR affinity is inversely correlated with the fraction ofbound tetramer remaining over time in the presence of an excess ofunlabeled tetramer. CTL clones elicited from IL-21 treated or untreatedcultures were stained with M27 peptide-tetramer-PE and incubated withexcess unlabelled M27-tetramer. The fraction of tetramer-bound CTL wasdetermined by flow cytometry at specified timepoints (2 to 60 minutes).TCR/Tetramer-peptide off-rates were found to be significantly faster forclones isolated from untreated cultures compared to clones generated inIL-21 treated cultures (FIG. 7). Taken together, these resultsdemonstrate that IL-21 treatment leads to the generation of T cellsclones expressing high affinity TCR.

To demonstrate whether IL-21 mediated enrichment for high affinity Tcells was due to oligoclonal expansion of a limited number ofantigen-specific T cells or represented a broader effect on the T cellrepertoire, TCR Vbeta expression among the cohort of high and lowaffinity T cell clones using a panel of anti-Vbeta antibodies wasexamined. For example, for patient CG, among nine high affinity T cellclones, seven expressed unique Vbeta chains (only two shared Vbetaexpression) and a similarly diverse TCR repertoire was observed amongthe group of low affinity T cell clones in this patient (among tendifferent low affinity clones, only two shared the same Vbeta)suggesting that the effect of IL-21 was not due merely to the expansionof an oligoclonal population of high affinity T cell clones in vitro(FIG. 3).

Example 5 Culture of Antigen-Specific CD8 T Cells with IL-21 SustainsCD28 Expression, IFNγ and IL-2 Production

CD28 is an important co-stimulatory molecule for generation of both CD4and CD8 T cell responses. Signaling via the CD28 receptor results inincreased stability of IL-2 mRNA and increased IL-2 production in bothCD4 and CD8 T cells (Boise et al, Immunity 3:87-98, 1995; Ragheb et al,J. Immunol 163:120-129, 1999). CD28 expression is lost ina subset ofhuman CD8+ T cells after activation and this subset exhibits reducedproliferation after anti-CD3 stimulation (Azuma et al, J. Immunol150:1147-1159, 1993). CD28-CD8+ T cells are increased in the elderly andin the CD8 memory T cell pool in people with persistent viralinfections, EBV and CMV (Posnett et al, Int. Immunol. 11:229-241, 1999).The loss of CD28 expression is most pronounced in HIV patients (Appay etal, Nat. Med. 8:379-385, 2002) and increases this population has beenreported in patients with melanoma. Recently, it has been shown thatrestoring CD28 expression in CMV-specific CD8 T cells sustains IL-2production and increased survival of antigen-specific CD8 T cells invitro (Topp et al, J. Exp. Med. 198:947-955, 2005). This pathway istherefore recognized as an important pathway for prolonged CD8 survivaland function.

CTLs recognizing self-antigen MART-1 are present at low numbers in theperipheral blood of healthy donors and are usually characterized by anaïve phenotype (CD45RA+, CCR7+ and CD28^(int). Differentiation of thisrare population in the presence of IL-21 was examined.Antigen-stimulated, untreated cells showed a CD45RO+ phenotypeaccompanied by loss of CCR7 and CD28 expression after a week in culture.In contrast, IL-21 treated cultures showed sustained levels of CD28expression, even 4 weeks after primary stimulation with antigen (FIG.10). This CD28 up-regulation was observed in both naïve healthy donorsand melanoma patients for both MART-1 and gp-100 specific CTLs.

To evaluate if upregulated CD28 expression led to a functionallycompetent signal, antigen-driven IL-2 and IFNy production was analyzedin these cultures. As shown in FIG. 11, IL-2 production wassignificantly elevated in IL-21 treated CD28^(hi) cells compared tountreated CD28^(lo) expressing cells. Furthermore, IL-2 production wasinhibited by addition of CTLA-4Ig, suggesting that CD28 expression wasessential for IL-2 production in these cells.

These data suggest, that in vitro, IL-21 is capable of inducing a CD28expressing memory CD8 T cell population capable of IL-2 production. Thismay translate to increased survival and activation of these CD8 T cellsin vitro and in vivo and suggests an important role for IL-21 treatmentas a monotherapy and in adoptive cell therapy for cancer and viralinfections.

Example 6 IL-21 Influences the CD8 T Cell Response to gp100 and NY-ESO-1Antigens

To demonstrate that T cells recognize other self antigens, the influenceof IL-21 on CD8+ T cells was evaluated in similar fashion using twoother tumor-associated self antigens, the melanosomal antigen, gp100(G154 peptide) and the cancer-testis antigen, NY-ESO-1 (NY157). See, Liet al., J. Immunol 175:2261-2269, 2005.

CD8+ T cells were stimulated in vitro with autologous dendritic cells(DC) pulsed with NY-ESO-1 (NY157) or gp100 (G154) peptide. IL-21 (30ng/ml) was added to IL-21-treated cultures. Six days following primaryin vitro stimulation, cultures were analyzed for antigen-specificity andsurface phenotype by tetramer staining and multiparametric analysis onflow cytometry.

In FIG. 13 panel A., the NY157- and G154-specific CTL frequency areshown as % of all CD8+ T cells next to boxed gates. For example, thefold increase in NY-ESO-1-specific CTL was 9.8 fold greater among IL-21treated cells over control (5.3%:0.54%). The fold increase in absolutenumbers of NY-ESO-1-specific CTL was calculated based on numbers ofcells in respective cultures and for NY-ESO-1 was found to be almost20-fold greater among IL-21-treated cells.

In FIG. 13 panel B., gated tetramer-positive cells from control or IL-21treated cultures were analyzed for CD28 expression. (All cells wereCD45RO+, CCR7-negative). Histogram analysis for CD28 expression amongNY-ESO-1 or gp100-specific CTL was found to be significantly upregulatedamong IL-21 treated cultures compared to control controls. These resultswere representative of 6 separate experiments from 3 HLA-A2+individuals.

Example 7 Enhancement of Anti-Tumor Immunity in Melanoma PatientsReceiving IL-21 Treatment After Myeloablative Therapy and Adoptive CellTransfer

Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) is based on the ex vivo selection oftumor-reactive lymphocytes, and their activation to autologustumor-bearing host. Tumor-specific T cells (TILs) are activated andexpanded in vitro in the presence of the patient's own tumor antigens inthe presence of cytokines and then transferred into the same patientfollowed by maintenance treatment with cytokines. In a significantnumber of patients, this leads to increased numbers of antigen-specificT cells in the periphery resulting in anti-tumor effects as seen byobjective anti-tumor responses. IL-21 is used both as an in vitroactivator/expander of antigen-specific T cells and also for maintenancetherapy of the T cells once transferred into the cancer patients.

All studies using human subjects receive prior approval by anInstitutional Review Board at the hospital conducting clinical trials.After informed consent, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) areobtained and antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) aregenerated by using autologous dendritic cells pulsed with theA2-restricted peptide epitope of MART-1 (M27) or gp100 (G154) or byusing a tumor cell lysate derived from a biopsy from the patients owntumor. T cells are expanded in a GMP approved reactor with appropriatecytokines (25-50 ng/ml of IL-2 or 10-50 ng/ml IrIL-21). In some cases,after three cycles of stimulation at weekly intervals, T cells arecloned by and expanded for in vitro testing. CTL clones demonstratingspecific lysis of antigen-positive tumor targets in a chromium releaseassay are selected. Clones are expanded in 14-day cycles by usinganti-CD3 antibody (OKT3, Orthoclone; Ortho Biotech, Raritan, N.J.) at 30ng/ml, irradiated allogeneic PBMCs, at 10⁶ cells/ml, irradiatedallogeneic lymphoblastoid cell lines (2×10⁵ cells/ml), and serial IL-2(aldesleukin; Chiron) at 25-50 units/ml every 2-3 days. All clones arecharacterized as CD3⁺, CD4⁻, CD8⁺ and expressed the high-affinity IL-2receptor (CD25) after antigen stimulation.

Patients with Stage III-IV metastatic melanoma receive nonmyeloablativechemoptherapy consisting of 2 days cyclophosphamide (60 mg/kg) followedby 5 days fludarabine (25 mg/m²). On the day following the final dose ofof fludarabine, patients receive cell infusion of tumor-reactivelymphocytes (10⁶-10¹⁰ cells/infusion) and cytokine therapy (high doseIL-2 720,000 IU/kg iv every 8 hours or 10-30 ug/kg rIL-21 in varioustreatment regimens). Some patients receive a vaccination with 1 mgMART-1:26-35 (27L) or gp100:209-217 (210M) peptide in incompleteFreund's adjuvant (IFA) injected subcutaneously. Patients hematologicparameters are monitored daily. Positive therapeutic outcome can bemeasured using objective status protocols to assess solid tumorresponse. Patient response is assessed using standard radiographicstudies and physical examination. See, Clinical Research AssociatesManual, Southwest Oncology Group, CRAB, Seattle, Wash., Oct. 6, 1998,updated August 1999.

Presence of objective CR and/or PR responses in this trial suggest apotent role for IL-21 in anti-tumor responses in the context of adoptivecell therapy either by culturing cells in vitro with IL-21 or bymaintaining patients with IL-21 after ACT.

Example 8 In Vitro Culture with IL-21 Enhances Anti-Tumor Effects in aMouse Model of ACT

Pmel-1 transgenic mice are mice engineered to express a T cell receptor(TCR) specific for the human melanoma-specific peptide antigengp100₂₅₋₃₃ (Overwijk et al., J. Exp. Med. 198:569-580, 2003).Splenocytes from pmel-1 transgenic mice are isolated and cultured in thepresence of 1 uM human gp100₂₅₋₃₃ peptide and culture media containing30 IU/ml of recombinant human IL-2 or 10-100 ng/ml murine IL-21 for 6-7days.

Female C57B1/6 mice (6-12 weeks old, Charles River Laboratories) areinjected s.c. with 2-5×10⁵ B16-F10 melanoma cells and treated 10-14 dayslater with i.v. adoptive transfer of in vitro cultured pmel-1splenocytes (as specified above). Lymphopenia is induced by sublethaltotal body irradiation (5Gy) of tumor bearing mice on the day oftransfer. Mice are then either vaccinated with 2×10⁵ pfu recombinantfowlpox virus expressing human gp100 followed by treatment withcytokines (rhIL-2, 100 ug/dose for 6-15 doses) or treated with cytokinesalone (without vaccination). Tumors are measured using calipers andvolume measured using the formula tumor volume=½ (B²×L) where B is theshortest diameter of the tumor and L is the longest diameter of thetumor.

Reduction in tumor growth when transferring IL-21 cultured pmel cellsprovide evidence of a potent role for IL-21 in in vitro activation andexpansion of antigen-specific T cells for ACT.

Example 9 IL-21 Treatment In Vivo Enhances Anti-Tumor Effects in a MouseModel of ACT

Pmel-1 transgenic mice are mice engineered to express a T cell receptor(TCR) specific for the human melanoma-specific peptide antigengp100₂₅₋₃₃ (Klebanoff et al., PNAS 101:1969-1974, 2004) Splenocytes frompmel-1 transgenic mice are isolated and cultured in the presence of 1 uMhuman gp100₂₅₋₃₃ peptide and culture media containing 30 IU/ml ofrecombinant human IL-2 or 10-100 ng/ml murine IL-21 for 6-7 days.

Female C57B1/6 mice (6-12 weeks old, Charles River Laboratories) areinjected s.c. with 2-5×10⁵ B16-F10 melanoma cells and treated 10-14 dayslater with i.v. adoptive transfer of in vitro cultured pmel-1splenocytes (as specified above). Lymphopenia is induced by sublethaltotal body irradiation (5 Gy) of tumor bearing mice on the day oftransfer. Mice are then either vaccinated with 2×10⁵ pfu recombinantfowlpox virus expressing human gp100 followed by treatment withcytokines (rhIL-2, 100 ug/dose or mIL-21, 20-100 ug/dose for 6-15 doses)or treated with cytokines alone (without vaccination). Tumors aremeasured using calipers and volume measured using the formula tumorvolume=½ (B²×L) where B is the shortest diameter of the tumor and L isthe longest diameter of the tumor.

Reduction in tumor growth after IL-21 treatment in vivo demonstrates arole for IL-21 in maintenance and activation of tumor-specific T cellsafter ACT.

From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that, although specificembodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes ofillustration, various modifications may be made without deviating fromthe spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is notlimited except as by the appended claims.

1. A method for identifying a tumor antigen comprising: co-culturingtumor material isolated from a subject with peripheral blood mononuclearcells (PBMCs) in the presence of an IL-21 composition and antigenpresenting cells (APCs); isolating a T cell population from the culture;cloning individual T cells from the T cell population; andcharacterizing T cell clones for antigen-specificity.
 2. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the T cell population is a T cell population that isnon-terminally differentiated.
 3. The method of claims 1, wherein thePBMCs or T cell population is an autologous cell population.
 4. Themethod of claim 1, wherein the tumor material comprises total RNA, lysedtumor cells or apoptotic bodies.
 5. The method of claim 2, wherein theisolated T cell population does not include CD4+ cells.
 6. The method ofclaim 1, wherein co-culturing is in the presence of the IL-21composition and one or more additional cytokines
 7. A method ofpreparing a naïve CD8+ human T cell population for in use adoptiveimmunotherapy comprising: isolating peripheral blood mononuclear cells(PBMCs) from a biological sample; identifying PBMCs having ahistocompatible phenotype to a subject having a tumor; isolating a naïveCD8+ human T cell population; co-culturing tumor material isolated fromthe subject with the naïve CD8+ human T cell population in the presenceof an IL-21 composition and antigen presenting cells (APCs); andexpanding the cells in culture.
 8. The method of claim 7, wherein thePBMCs are autologous.
 9. The method of claim 7, wherein after the stepof co-culturing the tumor material and with the T cell population, the Tcells are enriched.
 10. A method of preparing a naïve CD8+ human T cellpopulation for use in adoptive immunotherapy comprising: isolating abiological sample containing T cells; identifying a T cell populationhaving a histocompatible phenotype to a subject having a tumor;isolating a naïve CD8+ human T cell population; co-culturing tumormaterial from the subject with the naïve CD8+ human T cell population inthe presence of an IL-21 composition and APCs; and expanding these cellsin culture.
 11. The method of claim 10, wherein the T cell population isautologous.
 12. The method of claim 7, 10, or 16 wherein the tumormaterial comprises total RNA, lysed tumor cells or apoptotic bodies. 13.The method of claim 10, wherein after the step of co-culturing the tumormaterial and with the T cell population, the T cells are enriched.
 14. Amethod for ex vivo expansion of antigen-specific cytotoxic T cellscomprising: isolating a biological sample containing T cells;identifying a T cell population having a histocompatible phenotype to asubject; co-culturing antigenic material from the subject with the Tcell population in the presence of an IL-21 composition; expanding thecells in culture; and and reintroducing the cells back into the subject.15. The method of claim 14, wherein after the step of co-culturing thetumor material and with the T cell population, the T cells are enriched.16. A method of preparing a non-terminally differentiated CD8+ human Tcell population for use in adoptive immunotherapy comprising: isolatinga biological sample containing T cells; identifying a T cell populationhaving a histocompatible phenotype to a subject having a tumor;isolating a non-terminally differentiated CD8+ human T cell population;co-culturing tumor material from the subject with the non-terminallydifferentiated CD8+ human T cell population in the presence of an IL-21composition and APCs; and expanding these cells in culture.
 17. Themethod of claim 16, wherein the T cell population is autologous.